Volkhovnik
The Volkhovnik was an Old Russian book of divinatory nature which included collections of signs and their interpretations. It appears in Russian lists of banned books dating from the 15th century onward. It is likely that the entry for the Volkhovnik in Russian lists is based on the Tabula prenostica Salomonis or a closely related text. No copies of any works with this title have survived, and it is known that most of the omens are widely recognized in Russian folk belief.
Structure
Modern researchers characterize Volkhovnik as a collection of signs and divination. It is known that this book was divided into chapters, each of which was dedicated to a separate sign and had a corresponding title, for example:- "Voronograi" ;
- "Kuroklik" ;
- "Ptichnik" ;
- "Trepetnik" ;
- "Snosudets" ;"Putnik" ;
- "Zeleinik", which was divided into:
- * "Travnik" ;
- * "Tsvetnik" ;
- * "Lechebnik".
Content
An excerpt from the early Volkhovnik is given in his work by the historian Mykola Kostomarov, giving in some cases notes of incomprehensible expressions. In Russian:Also, at the moment, the texts of several travniki and about 400 lists of lechebniki that were distributed as independent works are known in full. Lechebniks were constantly supplemented and improved up to the 16th century, because of which researchers believe that earlier lechebniks have not reached us, and fragments of those that are known are poorly read.